Who needs a MM cartridge type when we have MC?


Dear friends: who really needs an MM type phono cartridge?, well I will try to share/explain with you what are my experiences about and I hope too that many of you could enrich the topic/subject with your own experiences.

For some years ( in this forum ) and time to time I posted that the MM type cartridge quality sound is better than we know or that we think and like four months ago I start a thread about: http://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/fr.pl?eanlg&1173550723&openusid&zzRauliruegas&4&5#Rauliruegas where we analyse some MM type cartridges.

Well, in the last 10-12 months I buy something like 30+ different MM type phono cartridges ( you can read in my virtual system which ones. ) and I’m still doing it. The purpose of this fact ( “ buy it “ ) is for one way to confirm or not if really those MM type cartridges are good for us ( music lovers ) and at the same time learn about MM vs MC cartridges, as a fact I learn many things other than MM/MC cartridge subject.

If we take a look to the Agon analog members at least 90% of them use ( only ) MC phono cartridges, if we take a look to the “ professional reviewers “ ( TAS, Stereophile, Positive Feedback, Enjoy the Music, etc, etc, ) 95% ( at least ) of them use only MC cartridges ( well I know that for example: REG and NG of TAS and RJR of Stereophile use only MM type cartridges!!!!!!!! ) , if we take a look to the phono cartridge manufacturers more than 90% of them build/design for MC cartridges and if you speak with audio dealers almost all will tell you that the MC cartridges is the way to go.

So, who are wrong/right, the few ( like me ) that speak that the MM type is a very good alternative or the “ whole “ cartridge industry that think and support the MC cartridge only valid alternative?

IMHO I think that both groups are not totally wrong/right and that the subject is not who is wrong/right but that the subject is : KNOW-HOW or NON KNOW-HOW about.

Many years ago when I was introduced to the “ high end “ the cartridges were almost MM type ones: Shure, Stanton, Pickering, Empire, etc, etc. In those time I remember that one dealer told me that if I really want to be nearest to the music I have to buy the Empire 4000 D ( they say for 4-channel reproduction as well. ) and this was truly my first encounter with a “ high end cartridge “, I buy the 4000D I for 70.00 dls ( I can’t pay 150.00 for the D III. ), btw the specs of these Empire cartridges were impressive even today, look: frequency response: 5-50,000Hz, channel separation: 35db, tracking force range: 0.25grs to 1.25grs!!!!!!!!, just impressive, but there are some cartridges which frequency response goes to 100,000Hz!!!!!!!!!!

I start to learn about and I follow to buying other MM type cartridges ( in those times I never imagine nothing about MC cartridges: I don’t imagine of its existence!!!. ) like AKG, Micro Acoustics, ADC, B&O, Audio Technica, Sonus, etc, etc.

Years latter the same dealer told me about the MC marvelous cartridges and he introduce me to the Denon-103 following with the 103-D and the Fulton High performance, so I start to buy and hear MC cartridges. I start to read audio magazines about either cartridge type: MM and Mc ones.

I have to make changes in my audio system ( because of the low output of the MC cartridges and because I was learning how to improve the performance of my audio system ) and I follow what the reviewers/audio dealers “ speak “ about, I was un-experienced !!!!!!!, I was learning ( well I’m yet. ).

I can tell you many good/bad histories about but I don’t want that the thread was/is boring for you, so please let me tell you what I learn and where I’m standing today about:

over the years I invested thousands of dollars on several top “ high end “ MC cartridges, from the Sumiko Celebration passing for Lyras, Koetsu, Van denHul, to Allaerts ones ( just name it and I can tell that I own or owned. ), what I already invest on MC cartridges represent almost 70-80% price of my audio system.

Suddenly I stop buying MC cartridges and decide to start again with some of the MM type cartridges that I already own and what I heard motivate me to start the search for more of those “ hidden jewels “ that are ( here and now ) the MM phono cartridges and learn why are so good and how to obtain its best quality sound reproduction ( as a fact I learn many things other than MM cartridge about. ).

I don’t start this “ finding “ like a contest between MC and MM type cartridges.
The MC cartridges are as good as we already know and this is not the subject here, the subject is about MM type quality performance and how achieve the best with those cartridges.

First than all I try to identify and understand the most important characteristics ( and what they “ means “. ) of the MM type cartridges ( something that in part I already have it because our phonolinepreamp design needs. ) and its differences with the MC ones.

Well, first than all is that are high output cartridges, very high compliance ones ( 50cu is not rare. ), low or very low tracking force ones, likes 47kOhms and up, susceptible to some capacitance changes, user stylus replacement, sometimes we can use a different replacement stylus making an improvement with out the necessity to buy the next top model in the cartridge line , low and very low weight cartridges, almost all of them are build of plastic material with aluminum cantilever and with eliptical or “ old “ line contact stylus ( shibata ) ( here we don’t find: Jade/Coral/Titanium/etc, bodies or sophisticated build material cantilevers and sophisticated stylus shape. ), very very… what I say? Extremely low prices from 40.00 to 300.00 dls!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!, well one of my cartridges I buy it for 8.99 dls ( one month ago ): WOW!!!!!!, so any one of you can/could have/buy ten to twenty MM cartridges for the price of one of the MC cartridge you own today and the good notice is that is a chance that those 10-20 MM type cartridges even the quality performance of your MC cartridge or beat it.

Other characteristics is that the builders show how proud they were/are on its MM type cartridges design, almost all those cartridges comes with a first rate box, comes with charts/diagrams of its frequency response and cartridge channel separation ( where they tell us which test recording use it, with which VTF, at which temperature, etc, etc. ), comes with a very wide explanation of the why’s and how’s of its design and the usual explanation to mount the cartridge along with a very wide list of specifications ( that were the envy of any of today MC ones where sometimes we really don’t know nothing about. ), comes with a set of screws/nuts, comes with a stylus brush and even with stylus cleaning fluid!!!!!!!!!, my GOD. Well, there are cartridges like the Supex SM 100MK2 that comes with two different stylus!!!! One with spherical and one with elliptical/shibata shape and dear friends all those in the same low low price!!!!!!!!!!!

Almost all the cartridges I own you can find it through Ebay and Agon and through cartridge dealers and don’t worry if you loose/broke the stylus cartridge or you find the cartridge but with out stylus, you always can/could find the stylus replacement, no problem about there are some stylus and cartridge sources.

When I’m talking about MM type cartridges I’m refer to different types: moving magnet, moving iron, moving flux, electret, variable reluctance, induced magnet, etc, etc. ( here is not the place to explain the differences on all those MM type cartridges. Maybe on other future thread. ).

I made all my very long ( time consuming ) cartridge tests using four different TT’s: Acoustic Signature Analog One MK2, Micro Seiki RX-5000, Luxman PD 310 and Technics SP-10 MK2, I use only removable headshell S and J shape tonearms with 15mm on overhang, I use different material build/ shape design /weight headshells. I test each cartridge in at least three different tonearms and some times in 3-4 different headshells till I find the “ right “ match where the cartridge perform the best, no I’m not saying that I already finish or that I already find the “ perfect “ match: cartridge/headshell/tonearm but I think I’m near that ideal target.

Through my testing experience I learn/ confirm that trying to find the right tonearm/headshell for any cartridge is well worth the effort and more important that be changing the TT. When I switch from a TT to another different one the changes on the quality cartridge performance were/are minimal in comparison to a change in the tonearm/headshell, this fact was consistent with any of those cartridges including MC ones.

So after the Phonolinepreamplifier IMHO the tonearm/headshell match for any cartridge is the more important subject, it is so important and complex that in the same tonearm ( with the same headshell wires ) but with different headshell ( even when the headshell weight were the same ) shape or build material headshell the quality cartridge performance can/could be way different.

All those experiences told me that chances are that the cartridge that you own ( MC or MM ) is not performing at its best because chances are that the tonearm you own is not the best match for that cartridge!!!!!!, so imagine what do you can/could hear when your cartridge is or will be on the right tonearm???!!!!!!!!, IMHO there are ( till today ) no single ( any type at any price ) perfect universal tonearm. IMHO there is no “ the best tonearm “, what exist or could exist is a “ best tonearm match for “ that “ cartridge “, but that’s all. Of course that are “ lucky “ tonearms that are very good match for more than one cartridge but don’t for every single cartridge.

I posted several times that I’m not a tonearm collector, that I own all those tonearms to have alternatives for my cartridges and with removable headshells my 15 tonearms are really like 100+ tonearms : a very wide options/alternatives for almost any cartridge!!!!!!

You can find several of these MM type cartridges new brand or NOS like: Ortofon, Nagaoka, Audio Technica, Astatic, B&O, Rega, Empire, Sonus Reson,Goldring,Clearaudio, Grado, Shelter, Garrot, etc. and all of them second hand in very good operational condition. As a fact I buy two and even three cartridges of the same model in some of the cartridges ( so right now I have some samples that I think I don’t use any more. ) to prevent that one of them arrive in non operational condition but I’m glad to say that all them arrive in very fine conditions. I buy one or two of the cartridges with no stylus or with the stylus out of work but I don’t have any trouble because I could find the stylus replacement on different sources and in some case the original new replacement.

All these buy/find cartridges was very time consuming and we have to have a lot of patience and a little lucky to obtain what we are looking for but I can asure you that is worth of it.

Ok, I think it is time to share my performance cartridge findings:

first we have to have a Phonolinepreamplifier with a very good MM phono stage ( at least at the same level that the MC stage. ). I’m lucky because my Phonolinepreamplifier has two independent phono stages, one for the MM and one for MC: both were designed for the specifics needs of each cartridge type, MM or MC that have different needs.

we need a decent TT and decent tonearm.

we have to load the MM cartridges not at 47K but at 100K ( at least 75K not less. ).

I find that using 47K ( a standard manufacture recommendation ) prevent to obtain the best quality performance, 100K make the difference. I try this with all those MM type cartridges and in all of them I achieve the best performance with 100K load impedance.

I find too that using the manufacturer capacitance advise not always is for the better, till “ the end of the day “ I find that between 100-150pf ( total capacitance including cable capacitance. ) all the cartridges performs at its best.

I start to change the load impedance on MM cartridges like a synonymous that what many of us made with MC cartridges where we try with different load impedance values, latter I read on the Empire 4000 DIII that the precise load impedance must be 100kOhms and in a white paper of some Grace F9 tests the used impedance value was 100kOhms, the same that I read on other operational MM cartridge manual and my ears tell/told me that 100kOhms is “ the value “.

Before I go on I want to remember you that several of those MM type cartridges ( almost all ) were build more than 30+ years ago!!!!!!!! and today performs at the same top quality level than today MC/MM top quality cartridges!!!!!, any brand at any price and in some ways beat it.

I use 4-5 recordings that I know very well and that give me the right answers to know that any cartridge is performing at its best or near it. Many times what I heard through those recordings were fine: everything were on target however the music don’t come “ alive “ don’t “ tell me “ nothing, I was not feeling the emotion that the music can communicate. In those cartridge cases I have to try it in other tonearm and/or with a different headshell till the “ feelings comes “ and only when this was achieved I then was satisfied.

All the tests were made with a volume level ( SPL ) where the recording “ shines “ and comes alive like in a live event. Sometimes changing the volume level by 1-1.5 db fixed everything.

Of course that the people that in a regular manner attend to hear/heard live music it will be more easy to know when something is right or wrong.

Well, Raul go on!!: one characteristic on the MM cartridges set-up was that almost all them likes to ride with a positive ( little/small ) VTA only the Grace Ruby and F9E and Sonus Gold Blue likes a negative VTA , on the other hand with the Nagaoka MP 50 Super and the Ortofon’s I use a flat VTA.

Regarding the VTF I use the manufacturer advise and sometimes 0.1+grs.
Of course that I made fine tuning through moderate changes in the Azymuth and for anti-skate I use between half/third VTF value.

I use different material build headshells: aluminum, composite aluminum, magnesium, composite magnesium, ceramic, wood and non magnetic stainless steel, these cartridges comes from Audio Technica, Denon, SAEC, Technics, Fidelity Research, Belldream, Grace, Nagaoka, Koetsu, Dynavector and Audiocraft.
All of them but the wood made ( the wood does not likes to any cartridge. ) very good job . It is here where a cartridge could seems good or very good depending of the headshell where is mounted and the tonearm.
Example, I have hard time with some of those cartridge like the Audio Technica AT 20SS where its performance was on the bright sound that sometimes was harsh till I find that the ceramic headshell was/is the right match now this cartridge perform beautiful, something similar happen with the Nagaoka ( Jeweltone in Japan ), Shelter , Grace, Garrot , AKG and B&O but when were mounted in the right headshell/tonearm all them performs great.

Other things that you have to know: I use two different cooper headshell wires, both very neutral and with similar “ sound “ and I use three different phono cables, all three very neutral too with some differences on the sound performance but nothing that “ makes the difference “ on the quality sound of any of my cartridges, either MM or MC, btw I know extremely well those phono cables: Analysis Plus, Harmonic Technologies and Kimber Kable ( all three the silver models. ), finally and don’t less important is that those phono cables were wired in balanced way to take advantage of my Phonolinepreamp fully balanced design.

What do you note the first time you put your MM cartridge on the record?, well a total absence of noise/hum or the like that you have through your MC cartridges ( and that is not a cartridge problem but a Phonolinepreamp problem due to the low output of the MC cartridges. ), a dead silent black ( beautiful ) soundstage where appear the MUSIC performance, this experience alone is worth it.

The second and maybe the most important MM cartridge characteristic is that you hear/heard the MUSIC flow/run extremely “ easy “ with no distracting sound distortions/artifacts ( I can’t explain exactly this very important subject but it is wonderful ) even you can hear/heard “ sounds/notes “ that you never before heard it and you even don’t know exist on the recording: what a experience!!!!!!!!!!!

IMHO I think that the MUSIC run so easily through a MM cartridge due ( between other facts ) to its very high compliance characteristic on almost any MM cartridge.

This very high compliance permit ( between other things like be less sensitive to out-center hole records. ) to these cartridges stay always in contact with the groove and never loose that groove contact not even on the grooves that were recorded at very high velocity, something that a low/medium cartridge compliance can’t achieve, due to this low/medium compliance characteristic the MC cartridges loose ( time to time and depending of the recorded velocity ) groove contact ( minute extremely minute loose contact, but exist. ) and the quality sound performance suffer about and we can hear it, the same pass with the MC cartridges when are playing the inner grooves on a record instead the very high compliance MM cartridges because has better tracking drive perform better than the MC ones at inner record grooves and here too we can hear it.

Btw, some Agoners ask very worried ( on more than one Agon thread ) that its cartridge can’t track ( clean ) the cannons on the 1812 Telarc recording and usually the answers that different people posted were something like this: “””” don’t worry about other than that Telarc recording no other commercial recording comes recorded at that so high velocity, if you don’t have trouble with other of your LP’s then stay calm. “””””

Well, this standard answer have some “ sense “ but the people ( like me ) that already has/have the experience to hear/heard a MM or MC ( like the Ortofon MC 2000 or the Denon DS1, high compliance Mc cartridges. ) cartridge that pass easily the 1812 Telarc test can tell us that those cartridges make a huge difference in the quality sound reproduction of any “ normal “ recording, so it is more important that what we think to have a better cartridge tracking groove drive!!!!

There are many facts around the MM cartridge subject but till we try it in the right set-up it will be ( for some people ) difficult to understand “ those beauties “. Something that I admire on the MM cartridges is how ( almost all of them ) they handle the frequency extremes: the low bass with the right pitch/heft/tight/vivid with no colorations of the kind “ organic !!” that many non know-how people speak about, the highs neutral/open/transparent/airy believable like the live music, these frequency extremes handle make that the MUSIC flow in our minds to wake up our feelings/emotions that at “ the end of the day “ is all what a music lover is looking for.
These not means that these cartridges don’t shine on the midrange because they do too and they have very good soundstage but here is more system/room dependent.

Well we have a very good alternative on the ( very low price ) MM type cartridges to achieve that music target and I’m not saying that you change your MC cartridge for a MM one: NO, what I’m trying to tell you is that it is worth to have ( as many you can buy/find ) the MM type cartridges along your MC ones

I want to tell you that I can live happy with any of those MM cartridges and I’m not saying with this that all of them perform at the same quality level NO!! what I’m saying is that all of them are very good performers, all of them approach you nearest to the music.

If you ask me which one is the best I can tell you that this will be a very hard “ call “ an almost impossible to decide, I think that I can make a difference between the very good ones and the stellar ones where IMHO the next cartridges belongs to this group:

Audio Technica ATML 170 and 180 OCC, Grado The Amber Tribute, Grace Ruby, Garrot P77, Nagaoka MP-50 Super, B&O MMC2 and MMC20CL, AKG P8ES SuperNova, Reson Reca ,Astatic MF-100 and Stanton LZS 981.

There are other ones that are really near this group: ADC Astrion, Supex MF-100 MK2, Micro Acoustics MA630/830, Empire 750 LTD and 600LAC, Sonus Dimension 5, Astatic MF-200 and 300 and the Acutex 320III.

The other ones are very good too but less refined ones.
I try too ( owned or borrowed for a friend ) the Shure IV and VMR, Music maker 2-3 and Clearaudio Virtuoso/Maestro, from these I could recommended only the Clearaudios the Shure’s and Music Maker are almost mediocre ones performers.
I forgot I try to the B&O Soundsmith versions, well this cartridges are good but are different from the original B&O ( that I prefer. ) due that the Sounsmith ones use ruby cantilevers instead the original B&O sapphire ones that for what I tested sounds more natural and less hi-fi like the ruby ones.

What I learn other that the importance on the quality sound reproduction through MM type cartridges?, well that unfortunately the advance in the design looking for a better quality cartridge performers advance almost nothing either on MM and MC cartridges.

Yes, today we have different/advanced body cartridge materials, different cantilever build materials, different stylus shape/profile, different, different,,,,different, but the quality sound reproduction is almost the same with cartridges build 30+ years ago and this is a fact. The same occur with TT’s and tonearms. Is sad to speak in this way but it is what we have today. Please, I’m not saying that some cartridges designs don’t grow up because they did it, example: Koetsu they today Koetsu’s are better performers that the old ones but against other cartridges the Koetsu ones don’t advance and many old and today cartridges MM/MC beat them easily.

Where I think the audio industry grow-up for the better are in electronic audio items ( like the Phonolinepreamps ), speakers and room treatment, but this is only my HO.

I know that there are many things that I forgot and many other things that we have to think about but what you can read here is IMHO a good point to start.

Regards and enjoy the music.
Raul.
rauliruegas

Showing 50 responses by halcro

they are not so stupid. They are pro-manufacturers where we are amateur-audiophiles.
Dear Raul,
It seems to me that you have found the 'fool-proof' way to buy cartridges, speakers, amplifiers, arms, turntables and even records?
Simply purchase the most expensive items available because these 'pro-manufacturers' are never wrong. They are so far above us lowly mere 'amateur-audiophiles' that we should be grateful for their expert 'ranking system' which makes our lives so easy?
And of course, because they are so 'expert' and 'not stupid'......they have obviously listened to all their competitors' products so that their pricing strategy falls into a 'universal' ranking hierarchy which allows us 'amateur-audiophiles' to simply pay the higher prices for the guaranteed better products?

As for your pronouncements that a 'better' cartridge can sound 'worse' because the audio system into which it's inserted "can't shows it" because of "his system limitations" .........this is a favourite claim by some incompetent reviewers attempting to explain the apparent shortcomings of some new expensive item under review.
It is a 'furphy'....unable to be substatiated under any objective criteria and is simply an expose of a poor product IMHO.
Every single new component of value which I have inserted into my system, has revealed benefits and sonic advantages.
Those items which haven't, are simply not of value to my system and despite the fact that theoretically they should be superior to a similar cheaper item, there is no possible rationale to keeping them in my system and changing all the other items till I perhaps find a combination that 'works'?
Greetings Lew and Professor,
I'm tickled that you like 'furphy'........I agree that its a bonza word especially here downunder.
It always intrigues me when I read an audio review (mostly on cartridges, phono stages or pre-amps), where the Reviewer concludes that this component is so good and revealing, that it makes half your records sound bad!!?
Don't buy this component they often warn, if you don't want to hear the weak links of your system?
Say what??!!
This component is SOOOO good....that it's bad?!
Do these people think we are morons or is the world of audio circulating in a parallel universe where up is down and right is wrong?
This is similar to the claim by Raul that a cartridge can sound so good (Wow) in our multiple systems.......but is really only 'average' because our systems have 'distortions'?
Yet other cartridges which some of us find disappointing in our systems, are so good that they only sound bad because of these same unspecified 'distortions' in our systems?
Huh?!
Up is down.....right is wrong.
A true furphy recognised as such by the official Australian Furphy Registration Board :-)
Dear Raul,
Your generalisations and comparisons are flawed and misleading.
The Porsche 911 Carrera 4 is NOT a better car than the Carrera 2 despite it costing more and being a 'higher model' in the Porsche range?
The Porsche GT2 is NOT a better car than the GT3 despite it costing more and being a 'higher model' in the Porsche range?
A BMW M5 is NOT a better car than the M3 despite it costing more and being a 'higher model' in the BMW range?
The FR7fc is NOT a better cartridge than the FR7f despite it initially costing more and being a 'higher model' in the FR range of cartridges?
The VPI TNT is NOT a better turntable than the VPI Scout or VPI Classic despite it costing more and being a 'higher model' in the VPI range?
A Rega P5 or P9 is NOT a better turntable than a P3 despite it being a 'higher model' in the Rega range?
A Signet TK-10ML is NOT a better cartridge than the TK-7SU or TK-5Ea despite it being a 'higher model' in the Signet range?
So please desist with these blanket generalisations which frankly are irrelevant to any useful discussions on the value of audio components as heard in our "amateur audiophile" systems.

And if I ever read again about your "special training" in the art of audio listening, I'm likely to be physically ill all over my cut-price iPad?
Your "special training" was at the Raul College of Self-Taught Boars whereas MY special training (and I have the certificates to prove it), was at the famed Toongabbie College of Advanced Audio-Sensory Appreciation.
So stick that up your hollow tapered boron cantilever tube and play it! :-)
Good call Pryso,
I suspected I might be channelling someone in my diatribe but Jerry is my alter-ego.
One of America's great contributions to comedy.
BIZARRO
In Europe it is not done to 'show off' about your self.
Dear Nandric,
In most English speaking countries it also is not done.
I have learned more about audio from Raul, than from any other individual on earth and I value his contributions on A'Gon immensely.
But please Raul.......if you can just eliminate two unnecessary and annoying characteristics from your writings, I think you will find there is more respect and attention given to your messages?
1. Stop claiming that you have special training in audio listening which no-one else has?
If it is true, then that should be its own reward but every time you repeat this nonsense, it makes you appear unintelligent and that is far from the truth.
2. Stop judging the sound and quality of others' systems based solely on their equipment. The worst systems I have heard generally have comprised the best and most expensive of components whilst the best systems I have heard, have been surprisingly modest but thoughtfully put together.

If you can just adopt these two suggestions, I think you will find that the antagonism that you sometimes generate will evaporate and your influence will grow commensurate to your knowledge and pioneering thought?

With best wishes
Henry
Hi David,
You asked recently about headphones and headamps and I've just found the phones and amp which, for the first time in my experience, actually sounds almost as good as my speakers.
The phones are the Audeze LCD-2 which are othodynamic 'open-back' designs and the head-amp is the Schitt Lyr which is a hybrid valve design putting out a full 5 watts!
I have never warmed to the sound of headphones with their 'in-head' projection and their lack of air, transparency and soundstage depth however.......whilst the LCD-2 cannot compete with those very aspects produced so palpably by my speakers, their balance, detail and tonality are so close to that of my full-range speakers that it seems to validate both transducers?
I'm not sure that its ability to dissect the differences in cartridges and styli is up to that of my speakers (in fact I'm sure it's not)......but it's the closest any headphones have ever come in my experience?
Cheers
Henry
Dear Raul,
If you read the A'gon ads for cartridges for sale lately, you will see that almost all the used MM ones of repute, are sold very quickly at rather high prices.
I suspect that this thread of yours, combined with the actual experiences of new listeners, is starting a quiet counter-revolution which, if my suspicions are correct, may have a beneficial effect in the development and sales of a greater range of modern MM cartridges? :^)
Dear Nandric,
The price for new knees.......is excruciating pain :-)
By the way.....have you seen the prices being asked on Ebay for the AT-7V?
$220-$260??!
To think one can buy it for $130....it really is a Bizarro world?
Dear Thuchan,
I'm reminded of the parable....."when she was good, she was very good but when she was bad....she was better!"
:-)
Hi Chris,
Nearest town population 2000?........I believe that's about 1600 more than in Timeltel's 'Deliverance' environs of outback Kentucky :-)
Stories are told of the ancient Professor wandering aimlessly and speaking in a strange tongue once claimed to be English?
Dear Professor,
A wonderful and thoughtful posting which manages to inform without too much technical jargon.
Not many here, are able to do such in-depth comparisons which need, not only the cartridges and the varied appropriate styli?......but presumably also, arms with readily interchangeable headshells to avoid 'memory loss' if manually changing cartridges from arm to arm?

Dear Nandric, unfortunately I agree with Timeltel about the 'need' for more than only one MM cartridge but I also understand you are 'locked into' fixed-headshell modern arms?
Wouldn't it be nice to have at least one vintage arm with interchangeable headshells to allow the required 'freedom'?
A Micro MA-505s will not break the bank and would soon reward you bountifully :^) IMHO of course.
Cheers
Henry
Dear Thuchan,
Knowing the paradise that you are in at the moment, I am envious despite the fact that I am listening to the Cardinal called FR-7f sitting on his FR-66s throne :^)
How long are you spending in the 'clouds' looking down upon us mere mortals?
Cheers
Henry
Dear Nandric,
As this thread mentions both MMs and MCs in its title, I believe it is permissible to listen to, and talk about both :^)
Besides which, since obtaining and setting up a second turntable and providing four separate arms with readily interchangeable headshells, I have discovered that the differences between the very top "Cardinal" cartridges, whether MM or LOMC, are quite ephemeral and not easy to differentiate without intense listening sessions with the ability to switch readily back and forth?

The surprising factor to me, was that a cartridge's abilities or characteristics, was discernible more readily in one direction than the other?
I can happily switch from a 'better' cartridge to 'lesser' one without hearing any noticeable 'loss' in quality yet, after acclimatizing........switching back......the 'improvement' was easily evident.
I have been terribly confused at this apparent anomaly, and have been carefully testing this phenomenon over the last few months.
I find I can sit happily listening to a quality LOMC cartridge (Universe, XV-1s, FR-7f) and thinking......."it can't get much better than this?"......only to find, after a long listening session, a quick switch to a top MM cartridge, makes me sigh and involuntarily utter the onomatopoeic ......."Ahhhhh'
the slower the arm responds to the stylus/cartridge movements.
I thought the arm should be 'neutral'.......allowing the stylus to perform all the movements unhindered?
If the arm "responds"........ Information must be added or subtracted n'est pas?
T_bone,
The very best arm I have found for very high-compliance cartridges is the Continuum Copperhead. This is out of the 10 or so vintage and modern arms I have mounted in my system.
The Copperhead recommendation is academic though as it was re-wired with DaVinci Grandezza wiring due to RFI problems with the original unshielded Copperhead phono wiring.
The second best arm I have found for high-compliance MM cartridges, strangely enough, is the high-mass Fidelity Research FR-66S. Go figure?

In_shore, I'm currently listening to the Empire 4000DIII in the Copperhead and it is quite luminescent although I agree with you that the MA-505S with a Yammy headshell punches above its weight.

Griffithds, do you have another arm for the MMs or are you only using the Graham 2.2 as I found the Phantom 2 to be a rather poor match with high-compliance MM cartridges?
Thanks Roy,
Your summary of the forces and relationships makes perfect sense (at least to me).
And from that, I can see that formulae may be derived to calculate and prove all that you say.....after all, it's not rocket science?.......or with the calculations of forces on moving masses and their reactions.....perhaps it IS rocket science :-)
Lewm,
Your description of the Clearaudio cartridges surprises me."Thin and steely" is certainly not a characteristic I would use after having the Clearaudio Insider Gold and Concerto in my system over several years.
Lush and coloured would be more like the sound I heard from them ...especially the Insider.
This is not to say that this describes the sound of the good MM cartridges but rather that the Clearaudios, unlike most of the other LOMCs I had heard, were more akin to that quality of 'presence'.
Dear Professor,
I love the looks of the Pioneer PL-70L......particularly that cool ebony lush veneer.
I'm sure T_bone will have some pertinent experience to pass on?
Good luck.
Henry
Er Danny,
If you DO find any OEM LCa styli......I may become a better friend than Timeltel?.......after all he already has one :^)
I have a TK-7e which accepts either a No.2 or No.3 Signet stylus (the No.3 converting it to a 7SU apparently..... although why would Signet produce a separate body with TK-7SU printed on it as well?....perhaps the Professor could enlighten?
I was also lucky enough to find a TK-7LCa body (without original stylus) which, with the 155LC stylus is as close to the original LCa (according to Timeltel) as one can come.
This is currently the King in my collection :^)
Looking forward to your impressions?
Hi Fleib,
The No.2 and No.3 stylus are OEM styli still available from WilliamThacker with the 2 being elliptical and the 3 being Shibata.
What puzzles me is why Signet would go to the trouble of elaborate screen-printing on the top of each cartridge body designating either TK-7E, 7Ea, 7SU and 7LCa when apparently they all share the same body and generator?
A change of styli thus changing a 7E to a 7SU and a 7Ea to a 7LCa?
Surely they could more easily have printed these designations on the swiveling stylus protector of each assembly much like Fidelity Research did with their FR-5 and FR-5E?

Dear Raul,
Your enthusiastic review of the Clearaudio Virtuoso certainly is tempting me to give it a try?
It is encouraging to find that manufacturers are finally offering top flight MMs at reasonable prices instead of the constant stream of LOMCs at ever more stratospheric prices.......although J.Carr seems to be bucking this trend by introducing LOMCs for Lyra, at 'down to earth' prices.

Incidentally, Michael Fremer is promising to do a review of multiple MM cartridges currently available. Hopefully the Virtuoso will be amongst them?
Greetings Professor,
I had no idea that Poet Laureate was also attached to your Doctorate?
Please tell me that it took no time at all for these verses to formulate in your mind.
So much time away from music would be a pity...or did you compose whilst listening? :^)
Forgive me.....an Acutex cartridge awaits :^)
Dear Professor,
Brilliant....I chime.
My daughter however opines
Where the hell are the bloody rhymes!? :^)
Cheers
Henry
Perhaps, having multiple tables, he is an analog agnostic?
Or maybe even a polytheist!
I like that David.
Both sound plausible to me :^)
Dear All,
Normal service is now restored.
We all saw and read where Raul has anointed the new 'King'.....the Clearaudio Virtuoso Ebony?
Apart from the cost being $1000.00, I did not immediately rush to buy this current model 'giant-slayer' because I feared that Raul had slightly differing subjective reactions to cartridges than I?
Whilst Raul has taught me a great deal over the last 5 years or so, and we agreed on many things audio.......recently we have disagreed on the merits of many cartridge models.
Whilst I have liked the old Signet TK3, 5 and 7 models (thanks to the guidance of the Professor (Timeltel)....Raul has denigrated these as 'average'.....a term worse than 'life-sentence' to an audiophile?!
Whilst Raul has lauded the AT 20ss and the Signet TK10ML I on the other hand have disposed of my samples of these.
Some anger has ensued over our differences although I still believe there need not be right and wrong on these issues.....simply differing preferences.
We all know however that Raul believes his preferences to be the right ones
:-)

Surprisingly then.....I had the opportunity to purchase a used Virtuoso Ebony for less than half price and took it.
VIRTUOSO
I normally use my favourite Yamamoto Ebony headshell these days for most of my cartridges but I feel that adding wood to the already wood-bodied Clearaudio was not the best idea.
Connecting it to the FR-66S on the Raven AC-3 I have been listening intently for the last three days.
Whatever our listening differences have been in the past, I have to say that Raul and I are hearing many of the same attributes on this beauty.
Perhaps because it was used, my Virtuoso almost immediately sounded 'right'.
You know how when you install a new piece of equipment and sometimes you have to convince yourself that you like it whilst other times....as soon as the music starts....you smile, relax and know?
The Virtuoso is just so convincing. There is nothing Hi-Fi about it. No pronounced bass or in-your-face midrange or exaggerated highs yet at the same time...the bass is deep, solid and real, the mids are earthy, convincing and three dimensional whilst the highs reveal subtle harmonics in certain recordings which escape all but 2 or 3 of the cartridges in my collection.
I won't bore you with the wonders of the great recordings heard through the Virtuoso because that is not my test of a great cartridge (although of course a great cartridge will shine on these).
Rather....I put cartridges through the torture test of the most demanding and difficult recordings....recordings with technical flaws or passages so saturated or coagulated with sound that they are generally uncomfortable to listen to.
My favourites of these are:
Respighi Pines of Rome LSC-2436 (an RCA Victor reissue)
Harvest- Neil Young
The Beatles-White album
At the climax of the Respighi, the screeching strings and full orchestral clamour are guaranteed to bring wives screaming down hallways like demented banshies.
Only a great cartridge will soothe the savage she-devils.
On side 2 of Harvest, 2 songs....Alabama and Words are so badly mixed and engineered that only a great cartridge can 'unravel' the intent beneath.
On side 3 of the White Album (in stereo) Birthday, Yer Blues and Everybody's Got Something to Hide are so poorly balanced and mixed that even the Beatles' brilliance can be lost?
Suffice to say that the Virtuoso passed with flying colours.
But a great cartridge does even more that sail through torture tests and provide all the encoded information within the vinyl grooves.
A really great cartridge provides 'Magic'.
I still am enthralled at how, with all the same equipment and the same records one can play a cartridge which fails to move whilst an immediate swap to another cartridge can provide all the missing emotion?
How can it be?
How does a piece of electronics conjure up 'emotion'?

Whether I finally agree with Raul that the Virtuoso Ebony is the greatest cartridge needs plenty more time and a shoot-out with the Signet TK-7LCa.
It is certainly a contender :-)
Hi Raul,
60K Ohms resistance and 70 uF + cable.
Also find that 2.0 Gm slightly better than 2.2gm and slightly positive VTA.
Regards
Henry
Dear Raul,
I'm also back to 2.2 Gm and neutral VTA....tonearm level.
Every change requires a change :^)
Dear Raul,
With the insertion of the new Victor TT-101 DD turntable which has elevated the performance to levels unimaginable before.........I have dropped the resistance on the Virtuoso Ebony to 47K Ohms.
If you can try it, may be better?
Regards
Henry
Hi Lew,
Yes......I finally managed to find a Victor TT-101 in mint condition and it just 'slips' into the same position in place of the TT-81.
TT-101
I am currently speechless about what I am suddenly hearing.
You can see photos updated on my Systems page attached here.
Dear Raul,
If you can.....and you have a remote armpod :^)....it is really worth a try.
It's really the additional information being recovered from the grooves which allows me to adjust VTA and VTF with grater accuracy.
And if one is really obsessive about connectors, what about those additional connectors at the rear of the typical removable headshell? If you use a Pmount with a removable headshell, you typically have connectors: (1) cartridge body to Pmount, (2)Pmount to headshell wires, (3)headshell wires to rear of headshell, (4)rear of headshell to contacts at end of the tonearm wand, not to mention (5)DIN plug if you use removable tonearm ICs, and (6) RCA jacks. It's a real wonder that any decent sound gets through all that crap.
It's a valid point Lew and one I have agonized over.
However as an old friend of mine said recently....."I've been young and I've been old.....and young is better".
Having had multiple modern arms with point to point uninterrupted wiring and many vintage arms with removable headshells and din plugs......I can report that some vintage tonearms (despite the added contacts)..... sound better than the modern ones.
Now tell us about the phono stage you use and the connections back to the Pre-amp? :^)
Banquo,
I actually bought those silver headshell leads from 2Juki believing them to be genuine but unfortunately three of the clips 'separated' quite easily from their soldered connections when I attempted to fit them to the cartridge pins.
I returned them to 2Juki accusing him of selling me 'fakes' to which he replied....."please don't accuse me of that"......and thankfully refunded my payment.
I don't seem to have a lot of luck with some vendors in Hong Kong?
Tommy of Topclass is always reliable.......thanks Thuchan :^)
Greetings Professor,
The Acutex do seem to have a distressingly long break-in period,
You're not just whistling Dixie here :^)
The 315 is only now beginning to blossom after more than 18 hours!!
And it's not a pleasant 'break-in'......it could almost be described as torture?
In desperation.......I used your old trick and left it sitting on a record overnight at 2.5 Gm.
It is now drawing me in and rewarding me for my patience.
This could be a contender?

Thanks also to Danny (Acman) for the Italian Connection for the STR 320LPM.
I ordered one which should be on the way shortly?
Dear Professor,
I have still to receive my 420STR but I agree with you on the 315.
I really had to give up on mine. I DO think my sample might be faulty as the left channel dominates the right no matter what I do with balance or azimuth?
The 312 is a 'keeper' however :^)
Shootout is proceeding with the Clearaudio Virtuoso and the Signet TK-7LCa......interesting!
A shoot-out between the TK7lca & CA Virt is much less likely to draw blood but should you wait until your Acutex 420 arrives and then introduce it into the fray, oh, what a melee!
Dear Professor,
Right again!
I received my Acutex 420 yesterday and right out of the box it was enjoyable.
6 hours later and this is a serious contender.
Nicola......I hope you have ordered one as your Clearaudio Virtuoso is about to be relegated to a minor place I fear? :^)
Does anyone experience some channel imbalance with their Acutex 420 from Italy?
I'm definitely getting more output from the left channel which is hard to correct even with the Balance switch on the pre-amp?
Dear Professor and Danny,
The 'key' to your timely advice........was 'anti-skate'!
I normally utilise minimal anti-skate on all my arms but for some reason.......perhaps because it uses 'dynamic' (spring-loaded) anti-skate.....the Micro Seiki MA-505 has always sounded 'tilted' to the left channel on most of my cartridges.
By winding the anti-skate to its maximum and moving the lateral balance weight to the outer extreme......and yes Professor....re-adjusting the azimuth so that the level of the cartridge body marks a perfect horizon to the record.......you have helped me cure the problem :^)
Many thanks once again.
And thank you again Danny for this Italian 'discovery'. The bargain of the month indeed!
Regards
Henry
Hi Don,
I, like you, Timeltel and Audiofeil ......do enjoy the Signet TK-7SU.
If you are ever lucky enough to hear the elusive TK-7LCa........you may find you have reached the mountain top? :^)
The Acutex 420 which you soon will have....should please you immensely.
Cheers
Henry
Hi Dave,
You sure got lucky and I'm jealous :-)
I run mine between 1.0-1.2Gm VTF and very slightly positive VTA (pivot up a smidgeon).
It also may benefit from slightly higher resistance than 47K Ohms.....I run mine at 60K Ohms and approx 120uF capacitance.
Hope you continue to enjoy it. It is rather a special cartridge IMHO.
Cheers
Henry
After much listening on a variety of arms, I believe the Clearaudio Virtuoso has the edge on the Acutex 420.
In fact, there is a lot of truth to Raul's original review on this Ebony cartridge....not to mention Nandric's 'special'?
The only weakness I can find with the Virtuoso.....is a limited width to the soundstage (they don't stretch beyond the centrelines of my speakers).
However Timeltel.....if you find one for $400-$500.....I would class it as an excellent buy :-)
For the last 10 years I have been bothered by the 'distortions' I was perceiving with low compliance LOMC cartridges on heavily modulated grooves especially in the upper frequencies.
When I returned to high compliance MM cartridges due to this thread of Raul's.....There was a heavenly freedom from these particular distortions which lead me to believe that MM cartridges were inherently better and more 'linear' than LOMCs?
And I now have a collection of over 20 of the most marvellous cartridges....most of them MMs.
With the insertion of the Victor TT-81 direct drive turntable and recently the supreme TT-101...... I have discovered that what I thought of, as 'LOMC distortion' on highly modulated vinyl grooves.......was nothing more than 'stylus drag'?
With the recently purchased Sutherland Timeline laser weight available for $400 from Elusive Disc......one can clearly see the effects of 'stylus drag' on heavily modulated vinyl grooves.
Reading what happens to the stylus as it hits these grooves almost at right angles to the direction of travel.......I thought to myself, that high-compliance cantilevers would 'bend' more easily and navigate the change of direction whereas low-compliance cantilevers would stubbornly keep trying to force their way 'through' the groove and thus slow down more?
With a superb DD turntable which is quartz-locked and servo-controlled and is able to micro-adjust speed in a forward and backward direction......the problems of stylus drag disappear.
And this is exactly what has happened. There is zero stylus drag with the Victor TT-101 even with the most heavily modulated passages (as clearly shown on the Timeline).....and now....when I play any of my LOMC low-compliance cartridges......I hear absolutely no high frequency distortion anymore.
I am now listening to these cartridges (FR-7f, DV-1s, Universe) on the TT-101 with new respect for the qualities of LOMCs.
May I return to the 'dark side' :^)
Hi Lew,
It's not the MCs per se which are causing more stylus drag.....but any low compliance cartridge.
My theory being that the low compliance does not allow the cantilever to 'bend' easily around the groove 'barrier' whereas the high compliance bends more readily thus avoiding the 'drag' process more readily?
However......as LOMCs are generally low compliance and MMs high......the effects are heard with the MCs most people are using?
YMMV of course :^)
Dear Fleib,
It is not friction which is causing 'stylus drag' but groove modulation.
Here is an excerpt from an article by Peter Moncreif published in the IAR
Automodulation Distortion

The turntable designer might instead try to deliberately use a very weak motor, with very weak kicks. But that still doesn't solve the above compromise dilemma (he'd still have to move to a lighter platter, if he wants reasonable startup times). And it also creates a new problem, relating to automodulation distortion.
What's this new distortion? Turntables get slowed down by outside forces, such as the drag of the stylus in the groove. This drag changes as the groove angle changes with large amplitude music signals. The more that the stylus is yanked side to side by a larger groove excursion representing a louder music signal or transient, the more its passage is impeded in the direction along the linear vector of the groove travel representing the time axis.
What's doing the impeding? The turntable is moving the groove under the stylus in a linear direction along the time axis. If there's zero music signal amplitude, the groove is relatively straight, and the groove walls are parallel to this direction of travel, and so these groove walls offer minimal resistance to the stylus gliding past them. But when there's large signal amplitude, then the groove swings wildly from side to side, so the groove walls are more nearly perpendicular to the ultimate direction of the stylus' travel, which is the time axis direction. Thus, the stylus slams into the nearly perpendicular groove wall, which naturally offers more impediment to its travel in the time axis direction. Think of it as the difference between gliding along on an ice rink, parallel to its surface, versus slamming into an ice wall perpendicular to your direction of travel. Pretty dramatic difference, right?
What happens when the stylus slams into the groove wall? Who gives way? Well, the stylus might be smaller than the groove wall, but he's a sturdy little bugger, being made of diamond and being anchored firmly to the pickup arm fixed on the plinth. So he hardly budges longitudinally, in the time axis direction (although he's free to swing from side to side, to track groove modulations). Instead, it's the groove wall that yields. Its soft vinyl gets momentarily deformed. As the compressed vinyl reacts to and springs back from this deformation, some of the energy gets transformed into heat, while another part causes the groove wall to partially shudder to a stop, i.e. to slow down. Thus, the groove wall slamming into the immovable stylus, at a nearly perpendicular angle to the groove's time axis motion, causes the groove wall itself to recoil from this collision and slow down in its motion along the time axis direction. When the groove slows down, of course the whole record slows down and the whole turntable platter slows down.
In sum, when the music gets loud, the larger side to side groove modulations become more nearly perpendicular to the stylus' steady travel along the time axis direction of the groove. The groove wall has acquired a vector component that effectively collides with the stylus, instead of gliding along parallel to it. Along this time axis direction, the stylus position is fixed, so it is the groove wall that loses in this collision, and the groove (hence turntable) slows down in the time axis direction.
This means, quite simply, that loud music slows down your turntable.
If you'd like to read the whole article, there is a link on my Systems Page.
Regards
Henry
Hi David,
Here is the link to the full Peter Moncreif article
HERE
I hope you appreciate it as much as I do?

On the question of DD turntables.......I don't believe they are all created equal and are thus a panacea for the problems of 'stylus drag'?
As I reported....there was a clearly audible difference when I inserted the Victor TT-101 in my system in place of the Victor TT-81.
Now everything about these turntables is identical except for the coreless DC motor in the 101 and the dual quartz locked positive and negative servo control.
I am thus ready to conclude that these two differences.......aimed solely at maintaining constant speed control........are responsible for the improvements I immediately heard?
And yes.......whilst I heard both low-compliance and high-compliance cartridges with the TT-81, the greatest improvement over the performance of the Raven with low-compliance cartridges......was with the TT-101.
Seems to me that it is likely that our favoured high compliance MM's may in fact be even more of a bargain than we realise.
If they require less of the TT drive for optimum sound, then we get the best result out of a more economical system... the saving may not be limited to only the cartridge.
I think there is more truth to your statement than we might realise?
Regards
Henry
Griffithds,
That article was like a thunderbolt to me when I read it.
Glad you also appreciated it?

Thanks Fleib for the compliment. Your thoughts on cartridges, together with David's.......have been invaluable to me.

Dear Lew,
Well said. I believe Raul stated that it was his high-compliance Technics EPC100Mk4 which was able to successfully track the cannon shots on the Telarc 1812 Overture?
It would be interesting to know if any low-compliance cartridge has ever achieved that feat?
Interesting Link Professor, on bearing friction.
It shows Teres.......believing in 'stylus drag' before he could accurately prove it exists via the Timeline?
Many pertinent comments there possibly requiring amendments to views held by some only 2 years ago?
Cheers
Let's not become hysterical about Raul's honest evaluation of the Acutex 420.
FWIW......I happen to agree with a much of Raul's statement.
Raul doesn't like the Signet TK3, 5 or 7 series of cartridges and in these cases....I disagree with him :^)
I initially liked the sound of the 420 and made the mistake of reaching that conclusion whilst one of my Halcro DM-58 monoblocks was being repaired and I had my 30 year old Perraux 1850 back-up amp in place.
The 420 is a cheap cartridge which does some things well but is certainly not in my top 10 favourite cartridges?
I currently have the rare and elusive Signet MR-5.0 lc installed in the Micro MA-505s playing the Victor TT-101 with the Halcros in full operation.........and I am bewitched and entranced.
The Acutex 420 is not really in the same ballpark.......but then again......not many cartridges I have heard, are. :^)
Dear Raul,
Nothing ever goes wrong with the DM-58 monoblocks except for their stupid 'air-switch' to turn it on.
Instead of a normal on/off switch that millions of electronic items have successfully used for decades, Halcro decided to develop a shmantzy 'air-switch' which turns on the electronics by air pressure up a plastic tube?
This is the Achilles heal of the amps as they put in a resistor which controls this and sometimes it became too hot and the amp 'switched' itself off?
Resistor and transistor all upgraded under warranty.....but now it appears that during manufacture........to slide the air-tube up through the electronics....the assemblers used a grease which after 5 years......apparently clogged the tube so that the air could not reach the electronic on/off switch?
Grease in now cleared out :^)
Sometimes being too clever is just dumb?
Greetings Rnadell,
I have 6 of the Yamamoto HS-1as which is simply my favourite headshell except with wood-bodied cartridges.
Having the cartridge leads hard-wired to the shell removes another 'connection' point in the analogue chain and the wiring provided.....is thick and of the highest quality.
The headshell slots I believe are the same as for the HS-1a?
My only caveat with this headshell is do NOT buy from the HongKong seller 2Juki as they are cheap Chinese copies.
Buy only from Japan. If you are buying from a private seller......caveat emptor?
Hi Danny,
You're correct in that for me...the Signet TK-7 series seems to get most things right in my system.
The TK-7E with the No.2 stylus certainly impressed whilst I agree with Audiofeil that with the No.3 stylus (converting it to the TK-7SU).......the performance achieved even more refinement.
It was however only after transplanting an AT-155Lc stylus into a TK-7Ea (on the advice of the Professor..Timeltel).....thus converting the cartridge into a TK-7LCa......that the Holy Grail was reached? :^)
This ultimate level of the TK-7 series is, however, almost indistinguishable from the performance achieved with the Signet MR-5.0lc. This rare, almost unspoken about......Maximum Resolution series of Signet cartridges.......is a revelation.
Interestingly though.....as Raul has expressed recently......increasing the performance of one's audio system in other areas......may require certain re-evaluations of conclusions previously reached?
For instance.........I have now controlled the power to my turntables and preamp with the Shindo Mr T, have removed one motor from the drive on my Raven AC-3 thus converting it to a Raven AC-2 (after testing the speed accuracy with the aid of the Timeline).
I also have replaced my Cardas Hexlink5 IC with the Cardas Clear Interconnects in XLR fully balanced mode from Halcro DM10 to DM58 Monoblocks.
I am currently listening to the Fidelity Research FR-7f LOMC cartridge on the FR-66s fixed to the Raven AC-2 and the sound is quite a revelation? :^)
Even in direct comparison to my two favourite Signets on the Victor TT-101?
At these levels of performance.......the 'absolute sound' can shift from day to day, but in the end.....without being persnickety......one can be truly happy with all the iterations of the Signet TK-7 series?
Your advice on the Akai RS series of stylus replacements is valuable and I shall certainly make a note of trying them in the future?
Cheers
Henry